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Inflation Calculator

Money quietly loses value every year — what costs an amount today will cost more in future, and a sum sitting still buys less. This shows how much you'll need to keep the same buying power, and what a future amount is really worth in today's money. It's the reason long-term plans should be thought of in today's terms. Nothing is sent to a server.

To keep the same buying power, you'll need

In…You'll needBuying power of that sum today

Plan in today's money instead

Chasing inflation in your head is hard. The full FIRE Calculator does it for you — every figure is shown in today's purchasing power, using your real (after-inflation) return, so "$1.5M at 60" actually means $1.5M of today's money. It adds taxes in 43 countries, pensions, Monte Carlo and your whole life plan — free and private.

Open the full FIRE planner →

How inflation erodes your money

Inflation is the steady rise in prices, so each unit of money buys a little less over time. The effect is small year to year but huge over decades, because it compounds. At 3% a year, prices roughly double in 24 years — which means money kept under the mattress loses about half its buying power over that span. This is the single biggest reason saving cash isn't enough for the long term: you need returns that at least keep pace with inflation.

How it's calculated

Two directions, both exact:

Future amount needed = Amount × (1 + rate)years Today's value of a future sum = Amount ÷ (1 + rate)years

The first tells you how much you'll need later to buy what an amount buys now; the second tells you what a future pile of money is really worth in today's terms. They're the same equation, run forwards or backwards.

Why the full planner works in today's money

Quoting a retirement number in future dollars is misleading — it sounds bigger than it is. So the full FIRE Calculator keeps everything in today's purchasing power and grows your investments at the real (after-inflation) return. You never have to mentally deflate a number.

Related: Compound interest · Savings rate · How long will my money last?

Estimates only, not financial advice. Assumes a constant inflation rate; real inflation varies year to year and by what you buy. Your inputs stay in your browser — nothing is sent to a server. · Full planner · All calculators · Compound interest · How it works · Español · Português · Deutsch · Français · Italiano · Nederlands · Svenska · Norsk · Dansk · Polski · Čeština · Suomi · Ελληνικά · Türkçe · Bahasa Indonesia · Bahasa Melayu · 日本語 · 한국어 · 中文 · ไทย · עברית · العربية · Feedback